Breaking the Meme: Critical Meme Reader III Launch @ Spui25 May 17th 

When: May 17, 2024 17:00 - 19:00

Where: Spui25 Spui 25-27 Amsterdam

When you want to say something about memes, it is impossible to escape having to situate them. What usually happens is that meme makers and thinkers fall back on two definitions: Dawkins (1976), Shifman (2014). How can memes be defined beyond their work in a way that is better suited to our current time? Building on this work – yes of course – but in a way that leaves space for the meme to breathe. Honoring its transgressive everchanging nature, instead of limiting it into a static framework it never chose to be in in the first place. What happens if memes and those who research and make them are theorized rhizomatically? Are memes the master’s tools that can set the working class free? What are the politics of publicly archiving memes? What would the meme think and feel, if it had a consciousness? For meme studies to truly theoretically evolve as a field, the meme needs many expanded definitions. The goal of Critical Meme Reader III is to break its definition open with different visions, and to keep it open –  letting the meme choose for itself what it wants to stay, be and become. 

Join us for the launch of the Institute of Networkcultures’s Critical Meme Reader III: Breaking the Meme, edited by Chloë Arkenbout and Idil Galip on May 17th at Spui25. 

Program 

  • Breaking the Meme by Chloë Arkenbout and Idil Galip (introduction)
  • Disassembly and Reassembly by Phill Wilkinson (lecture) 
  • Minimum Wage Memetic Manifesto by Alia Leonardi and Alina Lupu (performance lecture) 
  • Examining Know Your Meme and the Art of Internet Culture Archiving by Aidan Walker (interview) 
  • Computer Lust, Toxic Pollen and Still Landscapes of Desktops by Ray Dolitsay (audio-visual performance)
  • Drinks 

Breaking the Meme: Critical Meme Reader III Launch
May 17 2024, 17:00 – 19:00 CET
Spui25, Spui 25, 1012XA , Amsterdam 

Entrance: Free
Register for physical or online presence: https://spui25.nl/programma/breaking-the-meme-critical-meme-reader-iii-launch

Speakers 

Phill Wilkinson 

Dr Phil Wilkinson is a computer scientist turned social scientist who now undertakes interdisciplinary research across a range of fields. He investigates a wide range of subjects, depending on what happens to capture his (neuro)divergent interest, but primarily focuses on emergent digital cultures and pedagogies. Currently he is working as a ‘researcher-in-residence’ at a community centre where he is investigating and addressing the impact of the ‘digital divide’ on disadvantaged communities.

Alia Leonardi 

Alia Leonardi is a Belgian multi-disciplinary artist based in The Netherlands and a student at the Royal Academy of the Arts, The Hague. Her background in conflict studies pushes her to constantly explore the intersections of art and contemporary society. She is currently working on performativity and social media, as well as internet culture. Alia Leonardi is just a girl. IG: @liaouioui

Alina Lupu 

Alina Lupu was born and raised in Romania and works as a writer and post-conceptual artist in Amsterdam, The Netherlands. She is a student of the Master Photography and Society at the Royal Academy of the Arts, the Hague, and a graduate of the Fine Arts department of the Gerrit Rietveld Academy, Amsterdam. In her works, she looks at the role of the image and of performative actions when it comes to standing in solidarity through protest against capitalist hegemony and precarity. Website: https://theofficeofalinalupu.com/ / IG: @theofficeofalinalupu

Aidan Walker

Aidan Walker is a writer and researcher who has been published in Know Your Meme, Do Not Research, and other outlets. He is possibly the world’s leading authority on the Distracted Boyfriend meme, a niche topic on which he has written a hundred-page Master’s thesis. Read his Substrack at https://howtodothingswithmemes.substack.com/

Ray Dolitsay

Ray Dolitsay is a multidisciplinary digital artist and researcher. Currently, they are doing their Research Master’s in Media Studies at the University of Amsterdam. In their work, they investigate post-internet mythologies and radical queer embodiment in virtual spaces, that undermine capitalist gender architecture on/offline. Through their practice, they look into ways in which digital 3D imaginaries can queer the landscape of contemporary platforms, by often employing sound and immersive 3D environments.

Idil Galip (moderator)

Dr İdil Galip is a lecturer in new media and digital culture at the University of Amsterdam. Her work investigates the conditions of cultural production on digital platforms through ethnographic and theoretical interventions. She is particularly interested in exploring how internet memes are made, shared and monetised and wrote her PhD thesis on this topic. Her monograph based on this work and titled “Beyond Virality: The Art of Internet Memes” will be published by Intellect Books in 2024. She is the founder of Meme Studies Research Network, and the co-editor of the third volume of the Critical Meme Reader. 

Chloë Arkenbout (moderator)

Chloë Arkenbout works as a researcher at the Institute of Network Cultures in Amsterdam and co-edited the third Critical Meme Reader with Idil Galip. She has a background in both media studies and philosophy and is interested in the tactics marginalized people use to challenge oppressive discourses in the digital public sphere – from social media comment wars to memes. They also co-edited the first two Critical Meme Readers INC published in 2021 and 2022. In addition, she works at the Communication & Multimedia Design program at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences where she mainly teaches social design and is a member of the university’s Research Ethics Committee.